- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 210
PUBLICATION: Calgary Herald
DATE: 2005.11.14
EDITION: Final
SECTION: The Editorial Page
PAGE: A12
SOURCE: Calgary Herald
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Forces drone on
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Speaking of pilotless drones, it is an irritating reminder of what Ottawa thinks is a military priority that gender-neutral language has been inflicted on ordinary soldiers who should have more pressing things to be thinking about.
In military shorthand, these drones are referred to as UAVs -- Unmanned Aerial Vehicles. Or they were.
Now, thanks to super-sensibilities, they are Uninhabited Aerial Vehicles. As though anybody ever "inhabited" an aircraft.
It is about what one would expect from a <DND> which has replaced the time-honoured term "infantryman" with infanteer (rhymes with mouseketeer), and serving personnel are referred to as members.
In a naturally irreverent bunch, this has led to informal references to "members with members," and "members without members."
Perhaps a better solution to this linguistic awkwardness would be to forget the silliness about keeping the letter U in the UAV, and call these vehicles what they really are -- dismembered.
There's no life like it.
Please tell me this is a joke.....
DATE: 2005.11.14
EDITION: Final
SECTION: The Editorial Page
PAGE: A12
SOURCE: Calgary Herald
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Forces drone on
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Speaking of pilotless drones, it is an irritating reminder of what Ottawa thinks is a military priority that gender-neutral language has been inflicted on ordinary soldiers who should have more pressing things to be thinking about.
In military shorthand, these drones are referred to as UAVs -- Unmanned Aerial Vehicles. Or they were.
Now, thanks to super-sensibilities, they are Uninhabited Aerial Vehicles. As though anybody ever "inhabited" an aircraft.
It is about what one would expect from a <DND> which has replaced the time-honoured term "infantryman" with infanteer (rhymes with mouseketeer), and serving personnel are referred to as members.
In a naturally irreverent bunch, this has led to informal references to "members with members," and "members without members."
Perhaps a better solution to this linguistic awkwardness would be to forget the silliness about keeping the letter U in the UAV, and call these vehicles what they really are -- dismembered.
There's no life like it.
Please tell me this is a joke.....